Sabine Korth moves around the world with a light camera and with a map without borders. The camera is a Minox. The map is constructed through her foreign sensibility.
She is German, she lives in Italy, and she has traveled to many "exotic" places: Zimbabwe, Egypt, Ghana, Venezuela, Cuba, Turkey, Mexico, and, of course, Europe.

The feeling of lightness and the exclusion of borders are conducive to Sabine's montages: pictures made of sketchy impressions, contained inside a frame that is not a frame,
just a pause between stories, which seem interconnected to one another. When she is back home, she makes the montages. She looks at her contacts like a child looks at her toys.
She plays with them, she dreams through them, she cuts and pastes her dreams.
Sabine needs to see distant lands because she needs to explore the nature of her dreams. In some cases, these dreams reflect a Northern European fascination with warm climates
and lusciousnature. But the work is not about that. She does not appropriate the foreign world with a voyeuristic, distant attraction.
Her attraction to these sites has something to do with herself. She questions her own identity as she visits the natives who look like her, smile like her, get undressed like her.
She becomes part of her world, feeling, for an istant, that hers is "a small world". But the work is not about that either. Sabine does not recognize a universal pattern
which helps her to decipher distant lands and people. She feels different from this world, as she perceives the differences inside it.

She sees English advertisements in Africa, tourist shoes dangling on camels, tv screens above the desert landscape, Christian iconography and African dances,
military power and artificial gardens, evolution and revolution. She lets the foreign place visit her, and she brings the memory of the visit into her contemporary European awareness.
She brings camels to Berlin, Turkish mosques into Germany, African masks in the subway, the Brandeburg's gate by the Pyramids, the African kids by the Berlin wall.
She dwells, with dreams and concerns, in the large world without borders, once captured with a small camera.